THE DEEP ONES: Summer 2021 Discussion Schedule
ForumThe Weird Tradition
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1paradoxosalpha
7-Jul "The Wedding-Knell" by Nathaniel Hawthorne (1836)
14-Jul "Out of the Storm" by William Hope Hodgson (1909)
21-Jul "A Night in Malnéant" by Clark Ashton Smith (1933)
28-Jul "The Brood of Bubastis" by Robert Bloch (1934)
4-Aug "With and Without Buttons" by Mary Butts (1938)
11-Aug "Richmond, Late September, 1849" by Fritz Leiber (1969)
18-Aug "Children of the Kingdom" by T. E. D. Klein (1980)
25-Aug "The Gorgon" by Tanith Lee (1982)
1-Sep "Replacements" by Lisa Tuttle (1992)
8-Sep "Lost Sorceress of the Silent Citadel" by Michael Moorcock (2002)
15-Sep "Feeders and Eaters" by Neil Gaiman (2002)
22-Sep "Rebecka" by Karin Tidbeck (2012)
29-Sep "Origin Story" by T. Kingfisher (2018)
Participation looked like last quarter, with 5 nominators and at least 10 selectors, but we did have more total nominations this time around. There was a clean cutoff at net-6 votes. Top vote-getter was "A Night in Malnéant."
14-Jul "Out of the Storm" by William Hope Hodgson (1909)
21-Jul "A Night in Malnéant" by Clark Ashton Smith (1933)
28-Jul "The Brood of Bubastis" by Robert Bloch (1934)
4-Aug "With and Without Buttons" by Mary Butts (1938)
11-Aug "Richmond, Late September, 1849" by Fritz Leiber (1969)
18-Aug "Children of the Kingdom" by T. E. D. Klein (1980)
25-Aug "The Gorgon" by Tanith Lee (1982)
1-Sep "Replacements" by Lisa Tuttle (1992)
8-Sep "Lost Sorceress of the Silent Citadel" by Michael Moorcock (2002)
15-Sep "Feeders and Eaters" by Neil Gaiman (2002)
22-Sep "Rebecka" by Karin Tidbeck (2012)
29-Sep "Origin Story" by T. Kingfisher (2018)
Participation looked like last quarter, with 5 nominators and at least 10 selectors, but we did have more total nominations this time around. There was a clean cutoff at net-6 votes. Top vote-getter was "A Night in Malnéant."
2AndreasJ
As usual, thanks for keeping the wheels turning.
Mostly familiar authors to me this time, but many of the stories are new.
Mostly familiar authors to me this time, but many of the stories are new.
3semdetenebre
Thanks for tabulating. Nice to see Moorcock on the list. Not to mention a Leiber I haven't read. And five of the writers are women. Good story selections, everyone!
4elenchus
>2 AndreasJ: As usual
My usual thanks, as well!
My usual thanks, as well!